Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company, a Massachusetts Corporation v. Patricia O'Brien and Colleen C. O'Brien

5 F.3d 1117, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 25004, 1993 WL 382486
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 29, 1993
Docket92-3937
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 5 F.3d 1117 (Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company, a Massachusetts Corporation v. Patricia O'Brien and Colleen C. O'Brien) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company, a Massachusetts Corporation v. Patricia O'Brien and Colleen C. O'Brien, 5 F.3d 1117, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 25004, 1993 WL 382486 (7th Cir. 1993).

Opinion

FLAUM, Circuit Judge.

In this case, an insurance company appeals from the entry of summary judgment against it and from the award of attorney fees and a penalty to the defendants. We vacate both the entry of judgment and the award.

I.

On August 2, 1988, Janell Farmer, an agent for Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company (Mass Mutual), mailed a prospect letter to Sean P. O’Brien. Three weeks later, the two met in Farmer’s office to discuss life insurance policies. O’Brien said that he was in the market for insurance, but was worried that he would have to pay higher premiums because he had been treated for Hodgkin’s disease, a cancer of the lymphatic system, while a child. He explained that he was diagnosed with the disease in 1977, and received chemotherapy and radiation treatment through February and April of 1978. Farmer suggested that O’Brien complete a survey form so that Mass Mutual could consider his medical history for a $50,000 policy.

On October 18, the Mass Mutual underwriter informed Farmer that O’Brien’s policy was tentatively approved subject to an application and medical examination. Two days later, he and Farmer met and filled out forms. O’Brien completed applications for $50,000 of universal life insurance and $100,-000 of term life insurance. Following a physical examination by Dr. Roy T. Rapp, both applications were forwarded to the company. On December 10, they were approved and *1119 received by Farmer, who made an appointment with O’Brien and his fiancee (later his wife) to “deliver” the policies.

On December 15, O’Brien accepted the $50,000 policy, paid the first premium, and requested that it be changed from universal to ordinary life. At the same time, despite Farmer’s encouragement, he refused delivery of the $100,000 term life policy and did not pay the $39 premium. On December 20, Farmer decided to pay the $39 premium on her own by charging it against commissions due to her husband, another Mass Mutual agent. She later admitted that she did so, without O’Brien’s knowledge, because “I felt very strongly that he should have an extra $100,000 because of his medical history,” and prepaying the premium “would make it easier to deliver the policy and have him accept it and make payment to the policy.” That same day, O’Brien underwent a lumbar MRI at St. Mary’s Hospital in Quincy, Illinois, because he had been experiencing back pain, which he mentioned on his application and verbally to Farmer. The test disclosed a tumorous mass in the area of the second lumbar vertebra. On December 26, he underwent investigative surgery, and doctors discovered a ehondroblastie grade 3 osteosar-coma. Further tests were performed in early January, 1989, at Barnes Hospital in St. Louis.

Unsurprisingly, O’Brien changed his mind about the second policy. On January 21, 1989, he and his fiancee met Farmer at his mother’s house in Quincy. O’Brien signed a form called a conditional receipt and his fiancee wrote a check to Mass Mutual for $39.82. He did not reveal the medical developments that had taken place in December and January. Not until March, 1989, did Farmer learn that O’Brien was diagnosed with cancer. On July 12, 1989, he died as a consequence of a pulmonary embolism caused by osteosarcoma of the spine.

Mass Mutual paid the death benefit on the $50,000 policy to the beneficiaries, Sean O’Brien’s widow Colleen O’Brien and his mother Patricia O’Brien (collectively, the O’Briens). While investigating the claim, however, it learned that Sean O’Brien had undergone tests and surgery in December before taking delivery of the $100,000 policy without disclosing those activities to the company. Mass Mutual thereafter returned the quarterly premiums and filed for a declaratory judgment regarding its rights and obligations under the policy. The O’Briens counterclaimed, eventually winning the case on summary judgment. This appeal followed.

II.

To determine the rights and-obligations of the contracting parties, we begin with the policy application itself. It states, in pertinent part:

Liability of Company. The insurance or annuity applied for will not take effect unless each of the applicable conditions is met:
II. For Other Life or Disability Insurance or a Rider on an Annuity. For any other life or disability insurance applied for ... the first premium ... may be paid to the Company’s agent in exchange for a conditional Receipt signed by that agent. If this is done, the Company shall be liable only as set forth in that Receipt. If the premium ... is ... not paid, the Company shall have no liability unless and until:
* The application has been approved by the Company at its home office; and
* The first premium ... has ... been paid during the lifetime of all persons to be insured by the policy ...; and
* The policy ... has been delivered to the person named as owner therein; and
*At the time of payment and delivery, all statements in the application which relate to the insurability of the Proposed Insured are complete and true as though they were made at that time.

It is the last of these four conditions that apparently went unsatisfied.

Part 2 of the application required that Sean O’Brien answer a series of specific questions about his medical history by checking ‘Tes” or “No” boxes. For any question answered ‘Tes”, the application instructed him to “giv[e] particulars” in a large blank *1120 space on the form, including for medical histories the “nature of ailment, date, duration and attending physicians.” Question 4 asked whether he had ever been advised of or treated for a list of conditions and disorders. Part J of that question inquired about any “cancer, tumor, cyst, or disorder of the skin or lymph glands.” O’Brien checked the “Yes” box and wrote “Hodgkin’s.” He also drew an arrow pointing to the blank space, and wrote:

June, July, Aug — 1977 Diagnosis & Rx (chemo) Hodgkin’s Feb & April 1978— Radiation Rx — Barnes Hosp. St. Louis Mo. Edward Reinhart, M.D.

Question 7 asked: “Other than above, within the past five years have you: (A.) Had any mental or physical disorder? (B.) Had a checkup, consultation, illness, injury, surgery? (C.) Been a patient in a hospital, clinic, sanatorium, or other medical facility? (D.) Had electrocardiogram, x-ray, other diagnostic tests? (E.) Been advised to have any diagnostic tests, hospitalization, or surgery which was not completed?” Next to each part, O’Brien checked “No.” Question 9 asked: “Are you now under treatment or taking any medication?” O’Brien checked “Yes” and wrote “See below.” In the blank space, he added:

after lifting developed back strain (3 days ago) L-S-Spine x-ray today & will have-IVP Sat 10-22-88 Dr. Ali Rx Motrin 800 mg BID and Cyprofloxin BID, to be sure was not kidney infection.
States he “feels fine” works every day— (Back is much better today.) 1

Finally, question 10 asked: “Are you now planning to seek medical advice or treatment?” O’Brien checked the “No” box.

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5 F.3d 1117, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 25004, 1993 WL 382486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/massachusetts-mutual-life-insurance-company-a-massachusetts-corporation-v-ca7-1993.